Greece
CD: Marsheaux - Ath.LonSaturday, 30 July 2016![]() Right now we’re at the heart of the silly season. In mid-August no-one releases albums (it’s the same in January). Here at Disc of the Day we’re screaming for something decent to review. But, no, microscopic bands choose to hold their albums back... Read more... |
ChevalierTuesday, 19 July 2016![]() The opening shot of Chevalier trains the camera on a rocky beach surmounted by overcast skies. A dark form emerges from the water, then another and another. They're like creatures from the primordial soup making land all those millions of years ago... Read more... |
Sunken Cities: Egypt's lost worlds rediscoveredTuesday, 24 May 2016![]() In a gallery darkened to evoke the seabed that was its resting place for over a thousand years, the colossal figure of Hapy, the Egyptian god of the Nile flood, greets visitors just as it met sailors entering the busy trading port of Thonis-... Read more... |
Brighton Festival: Yanis Varoufakis, Brighton DomeWednesday, 11 May 2016![]() Maybe rock star economists are what we need. Former Greek finance minister Varoufakis’s bullish good looks, charisma and verbal fireworks failed to charm the Troika technocrats who finally banished him from government during last year’s infamous... Read more... |
Medea, Almeida TheatreFriday, 02 October 2015![]() With her strong, often fierce features and her convincing simulations of rage, Kate Fleetwood might have been born to play Medea. Unfortunately this isn’t Euripides’ Medea but Rachel Cusk’s free variations on the myth rather than the play. Many... Read more... |
Building the Ancient City: Athens, BBC TwoFriday, 21 August 2015![]() Heaven, or a lot of pagan gods at least, may know what was in the air 2500 years ago. Bettany Hughes has just finished her trilogy of philosophers from that millennium, and now we have Professor Andrew Wallace-Hadrill taking us genially around... Read more... |
The Iliad, British Museum /Almeida TheatreSaturday, 15 August 2015![]() You don’t know Homer’s Iliad until you’ve heard it read aloud, all 24 books – not quite every line, but almost – and 16 hours of it. Yesterday's marathon was surely something like the events in which the Athenians kept the oral tradition... Read more... |
CD: Xaos - ChaosSunday, 05 July 2015![]() The Xaos project arises out of a lineage that goes back to the early days of the world music phenomenon, at the start of the 1980s, when Jon Hassell spoke of “Fourth World” sounds, and David Byrne and Brian Eno extended the compositional palette... Read more... |
Oresteia, Almeida TheatreSaturday, 06 June 2015![]() There are two fundamental ways to fillet the untranslatable poetry and ritual of Aeschylus, most remote of the three ancient Greek tragedians, for a contemporary audience. One is to find a poet of comparable word-magic and a composer to reflect the... Read more... |
Defining Beauty: The Body in Ancient Greek Art, British MuseumThursday, 26 March 2015![]() We think we know it when we see it. But how, pray, do we define beauty? The ancient Greeks thought they had the measure of it. In the 4th century BC, the “chief forms of beauty,” according to Aristotle, were “order, symmetry and clear delineation.”... Read more... |
The Broken Heart, Sam Wanamaker PlayhouseThursday, 19 March 2015![]() Jacobean playwright John Ford is flavour of the season at the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse. His better-known, and simply better, ‘Tis Pity She’s a Whore, opened the venue’s new programme last autumn and is followed now by that work’s younger sibling, The... Read more... |
theartsdesk in Moscow: Remembering George CostakisSunday, 22 February 2015![]() Russia’s national gallery, the Tretyakov, bears the name of its founder Pavel Tretyakov, the 19th-century merchant who bequeathed his huge collection of Russian art to the city of Moscow in 1892. His bust stands proudly overseeing the entrance to... Read more... |
